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Financial Aid 101. What is Financial Aid. Gift Aid Scholarships Grants Self-help aid Loans Employment opportunities. Goals of Financial Aid. Primary goal is to assist students in paying for college and is achieved by - Evaluating family’s ability to pay educational costs
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Financial Aid101 CSU HS Counselor 2007
What is Financial Aid • Gift Aid • Scholarships • Grants • Self-help aid • Loans • Employment opportunities
Goals of Financial Aid • Primary goal is to assist students in paying for college and is achieved by - • Evaluating family’s ability to pay educational costs • Distributing limited resources in an equitable manner • A package of financial aid awards is put together to meet the student’s need & may consist of gift aid and/or self-help aid, depending on the student’s eligibility
Definition of Need Cost of Attendance (COA) - Expected Family Contribution (EFC) ___________________________________ = Need
Principles of Need Analysis • Need Analysis determines the Expected Family Contribution. This calculation is based on a standard formula determined by the U.S. Congress. • To extent they are able, parents have primary responsibility to pay for dependent child’s education • Students also have responsibility to contribute to educational costs
Independent Student Definition • At least 24 years old by December 31 of award year covered by the FAFSA; • Graduate or professional student; • Married; • Has children or dependents (other than a spouse) for whom the student provides more than half support;
Independent Student Definition • Orphan or ward/dependent of the court; • Currently an active duty member or Veteran of U.S. Armed Forces; or • Determined to be “independent” by financial aid administrator based on unusual circumstances
Types of Financial Aid (Federal) • Federal Pell Grants • Academic Competitiveness Grant (ACG); 1st or 2nd year of college • National Science & Mathematics Access to Retain Talent Grant (SMART); 3rd or 4th year of college • Federal Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants (FSEOG)
Types of Financial Aid (State) • Cal Grants • Chaffee Grants • CSU - State University Grant (SUG) • CSU - Educational Opportunity Program (EOP) • Community Colleges – Board of Governor’s Grant (BOGG)
Types of Self – Help Aid • Federal Work-Study (FWS) • Federal Perkins Loans • Stafford Loans • PLUS Loans
Primary Applications • FAFSA • For Federal, State, Campus, some private $$ • GPA verification for California grant
FAFSA • Collects family’s personal and financial information used to calculate student’s EFC • Available in English and Spanish • Apply electronically via FAFSA on the Web
FAFSA on the Web • Web site: www.fafsa.ed.gov • 2009-10 FAFSA on the Web available on or after January 1, 2009 • FAFSA on the Web Worksheet: • Used as “pre-application” worksheet • Questions follow order of FAFSA on the Web Get PIN to complete electronic process
PIN Registration • Web site: www.pin.ed.gov • Can get PIN at any time • Recommend parents get a PIN also • May be used by students and parents throughout aid process, including subsequent school years
FAFSA Processing Results • Central Processing System (CPS) notifies student of FAFSA processing results by email, or by letter if no email address is provided on the FAFSA. • If information needs to be updated or corrected, students and parents can make corrections online at www.fafsa.ed.gov using their PIN’s for access and signatures. • Institutions may correct information after requested verification documents are submitted and reviewed.
California (Cal) Grant • March 2 deadline, most CSU campuses (FAFSA too) • High schools have a critical role in submitting GPAs for students • On-line if you can • It takes 2 – GPA verification for Cal Grant and the FAFSA
Cal Grant Award Notification • California Aid Report (CAR) • Paper form, classic mail • Sent 2-4 weeks after both FAFSA and GPA are submitted • If eligible will show Cal Grant amount at 1st 3 California colleges listed on FAFSA • If no letter by April: • Call 1-888-224-7268 (1-888 CA GRANT)
What Students Should Do Next • Respond immediately to all requests for follow-up documents, including the admissions office • Ask questions, don’t make assumptions or go by another student’s experience • Find out how the college will communicate with the student – many rely on student checking their email and portals for document requests and award notices • Understand the costs of education, ways they can control them, and financial decision points • Investigate other sources of aid
PARTNERING FOR SUCCESS • Cal Grant GPA Verification – let students know their responsibilities for meeting this requirement. • Graduation Verification – encourage students to request final transcript before school year ends. • Special Circumstances – If the student or family’s situation has changed dramatically due to recent events, such as layoff, disability, death of parent, etc., the student should speak with the financial aid office to request reconsideration.
CSU Financial Aid 2006-07 • 228,324 CSU Students received aid • $1.8 Billion • Grants: 169,000 students receive $861 Million • Average Award: $5,085 • 74% received grants • Loans: 142,000 students - $958 Million • Average Loan: $6,744 • 62% received loans • Work-Study: 8,222 - $19 Million • Average Award: $2,322 • 4% received work-study
The CSU Experience • Emerging state and national issues • CSU perspective and approach